Solar Energy Program

The Bureau of Land Management (BLM) created a Solar Energy Program for utility-scale solar energy development on BLM administered lands in six southwestern states: Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah. As applicable to the Solar Energy Program, utility-scale projects are those with capacities of 20 megawatts (MW) or greater that generate electricity that is delivered into the transmission grid.

Through the Solar PEIS ROD, the BLM established a comprehensive Solar Energy Program that allows the permitting of future solar energy development projects on public lands to proceed in a more efficient, standardized, and environmentally responsible manner. This website is intended to provide easy access to specific information about implementing the Solar Energy Program to aid regulatory agency staff, solar developers, and other interested stakeholders.

As part of the Solar Energy Program, the BLM has categorized lands that are excluded from utility-scale solar energy development (about 79 million acres [319,702 km2]) and has identified specific locations that are well suited for utility-scale production of solar energy (solar energy zones, or SEZs) where the BLM proposes to prioritize development (about 285,000 acres [1,553 km2]). The program emphasizes and incentivizes development within SEZs and outlines a collaborative process for identifying additional SEZs. The right-of-way (ROW) regulations (43 CFR 2800) subsequently published by the BLM on December 19, 2016 have identified the SEZs as “designated leasing areas (DLAs)” and solar energy development on these lands will be facilitated through the offer of competitive solar energy ROW leases.

The program allows for responsible utility-scale solar energy development in variance areas outside of SEZs in accordance with the established variance process. These variance areas would now be considered lands “outside of designated leasing areas” under the ROW regulations (43 CFR 2800) published by the BLM on December 19, 2016. The program also establishes programmatic design features that are required for all utility-scale solar energy development on BLM-administered lands to avoid, minimize, and mitigate adverse impacts on resources of concern.

What Is the Record of Decision (ROD)?

The ROD records the decisions of the BLM Director and approval of these decisions by the Secretary of the Interior to establish a comprehensive Solar Energy Program to administer the development of utility-scale solar energy resources on BLM-administered public lands in six southwestern states: Arizona, California, Colorado, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah. This includes land use plan amendments for land use allocations (exclusion areas, variance lands, and SEZs), the policies that support these land use plan decisions, and programmatic design features.

What Projects Does the Solar PEIS ROD Apply To?

The Solar Energy Program decisions will guide the processing of all new utility-scale solar energy ROW applications on BLM-administered lands. The BLM defines new applications as any applications filed within proposed SEZs after June 30, 2009, and any applications filed within proposed variance and/or exclusion areas after the October 28, 2011, publication of the Supplement to the Draft Solar PEIS. The ROD has also been supplemented by ROW regulations (43 CFR 2800) finalized on December 19, 2016 to further facilitate solar energy development on BLM-administered public lands and to establish competitive procedures to offer ROW leases for development inside of “designated leasing areas (DLAs)” (Note: The regulations state that the SEZs are DLAs for solar development).

Solar energy ROW applications the 10.8 million acre Desert Renewable Energy Conservation Plan (DRECP) area in California are now subject to the decisions adopted in the ROD for the DRECP Environmental Impact Statement, approved in September 2016.

What Is Outside the Scope of the ROD?

The ROD does not authorize any solar energy development projects or eliminate the need for site-specific environmental reviews for any future utility-scale solar energy development project. The BLM will make separate decisions as to whether or not to authorize individual solar energy projects in conformance with existing land use plans as amended by the ROD. The BLM will complete a site-specific environmental review of all solar energy ROW applications in accordance with the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) prior to issuing a ROW authorization. The BLM will also complete a NEPA analysis prior to offering lands for a competitive auction within a designated leasing area or SEZ and also complete a NEPA analysis prior to approval of a Plan of Development (POD) for a project. All future projects will tier to the analysis in the Solar PEIS to the extent practicable.

The scope of the ROD is limited to utility-scale solar energy development. For the purposes of the Solar PEIS and associated decisions, utility-scale solar energy development is defined as any project capable of generating 20 MW or more. As a result, the Solar Energy Program applies only to projects of this scale; decisions on projects that are less than 20 MW will continue to be made in accordance with existing land use plan requirements, current applicable policy, and individual site-specific NEPA analyses.

While the Solar PEIS considers the impacts of constructing, operating, and decommissioning the related infrastructure needed to support utility-scale solar energy development, such as roads, transmission lines, and natural gas or water pipelines, the land use plan decisions (e.g., exclusions, SEZs) are applicable only to utility-scale solar energy generation facilities. Management decisions for supporting infrastructure will continue to be made in accordance with existing land use plan decisions and current applicable policy and procedures.

None of the land use plan decisions or policies described in the ROD are applicable to private lands or other lands outside the BLM's jurisdiction.

The only land use allocations made through the ROD are to identify exclusion areas, variance lands, and SEZs (see Appendix A). The ROD does not amend any land use plan to open areas for utility-scale solar energy development that existing land use plans have identified as exclusion or avoidance areas.

The ROD and the associated land use plan amendments do not provide guidance or direction for pending applications for utility-scale solar energy development on BLM-administered lands. The BLM defines “pending” applications as any applications (regardless of place in line) filed within proposed variance and/or exclusion areas before the publication of the Supplement to the Draft Solar PEIS (October 28, 2011), and any applications filed within proposed SEZs before June 30, 2009. Pending applications will not be subject to any decisions adopted by the Solar PEIS ROD. The BLM will process pending solar applications consistent with land use plan decisions in place prior to amendment by the ROD and policies and procedures currently in place, or as may be modified in the future. Amendments to pending applications would also not be subject to the decisions adopted by the ROD provided they meet the criteria identified in Appendix B, Section B.3.

The decisions in the ROD did not change any regulatory procedures generally applicable to ROWs on BLM-administered lands. However, the BLM did subsequently pursue a rulemaking effort that resulted in the publication of final ROW regulations (43 CFR 2800) that were issued on December 19, 2016 and now apply to solar energy development on BLM-administered public lands.